Book Image

Hands-On Dependency Injection in Go

By : Corey Scott
Book Image

Hands-On Dependency Injection in Go

By: Corey Scott

Overview of this book

Hands-On Dependency Injection in Go takes you on a journey, teaching you about refactoring existing code to adopt dependency injection (DI) using various methods available in Go. Of the six methods introduced in this book, some are conventional, such as constructor or method injection, and some unconventional, such as just-in-time or config injection. Each method is explained in detail, focusing on their strengths and weaknesses, and is followed with a step-by-step example of how to apply it. With plenty of examples, you will learn how to leverage DI to transform code into something simple and flexible. You will also discover how to generate and leverage the dependency graph to spot and eliminate issues. Throughout the book, you will learn to leverage DI in combination with test stubs and mocks to test otherwise tricky or impossible scenarios. Hands-On Dependency Injection in Go takes a pragmatic approach and focuses heavily on the code, user experience, and how to achieve long-term benefits through incremental changes. By the end of this book, you will have produced clean code that’s easy to test.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)

Disadvantages of method injection

I do not have a long list of disadvantages for you; in fact, I have only two.

Adding parameters detracts from the UX—This is a rather big one. Adding parameters to a method or function detracts from the UX of the function. As we saw in Chapter 3, Coding for User Experience, a bad UX for a function can negatively impact its usability.

Consider the following struct:

// Load people from the database
type PersonLoader struct {
}

func (d *PersonLoader) Load(db *sql.DB, ID int) (*Person, error) {
return nil, errors.New("not implemented")
}

func (d *PersonLoader) LoadAll(db *sql.DB) ([]*Person, error) {
return nil, errors.New("not implemented")
}

This code works; it gets the job done. But it's annoying to have to pass in the database every time. Beyond that, there is no guarantee that the code that calls Load() also...